It "nasalizes" the vowel it is over. In other words, you pronounce it with a nasal quality. Very difficult to explain, but if you hear it, you'll know.
The 2 squiggly lines (~) is called a tilde. It can mean "approximately" or "similar to" in text, as well as indicate a range of values. It is also used in some languages as a diacritic mark to change the pronunciation of a letter.
The squiggly line is actually under the c, and it is an accent called a cedilla. It indicates that the c has a soft sound rather than a hard sound (like an s instead of a k)
"Contigo" in Portuguese means "with you."
Life.
The word "mean" in Portuguese can be translated as "cruel" or "maldoso" when referring to someone being unkind or hurtful.
this is and ampersand......&
It means congruent. It is NOT 'approximately equal', which would be an equal sigh where BOTH lines are squiggly.
Draw a squiggly line under the 0.
The squiggly line in music notation is called a trill. It indicates that the musician should rapidly alternate between the written note and the note above it.
It is a line that twists and turns, not astraight line.
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ is the line
If you mean the n with a squiggly line on top, it's pronounced en-yay.
I drew a squiggly line.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.
It is in fact not a squiggly line.. But a small outline of the state. This is done to combat counterfeitting and also as a tracking method.
parall
A number of computer programs and phone apps have built in spell-checkers. If the word you have used is not one which the computer/phone recognizes, it marks it with a squiggly red line. This does not necessarily mean that you have spelled the word wrong: it could be a proper noun, or a slang word, or a spelling which is not used by the geek who created the program. The squiggly line is only an alert; you must decide if the word actually needs changing.